Sommerfeld in 1916 introduced the dimensionless fine structure constant, α, in to the context of atomic physics, in the course of working out the relativistic theory of the H atom, under the old quantum theory of Bohr. He was able to account for the fine structural detail of the atomic line spectrum of H by introducing this dimensionless constant which emerged naturally from his relativistic theory of the H atom. Since this time, the fine structure constant has emerged in several other contexts within experimental and theoretical physics. It has attained a status of being a mysterious number in physics that defies understanding as to its experimentally verified magnitude and identity. Being physically dimensionless, such a number invites a suggestion (or approximation) of its value in terms of mathematical constants in some formulation. Feynman most famously has conjectured that it might be possible to account for α in some type of series or product expression in “e”, the base of natural logarithms, and “π” the familiar circular constant. Here we propose an infinite series in the product e·π that converges, within a few terms, to better than 9999 parts in 10,000 of the true value of α.